McDonald's has been accused in a
lawsuit of using beef fat in the preparation of
french fries while claiming they are vegetarian.

The lawsuit for unspecified damages was filed on
behalf of two Hindus and one non-Hindu
vegetarian Tuesday in King County Superior Court
by Harish Bharti, who said he believes the case
is the first of its kind in the United States.

He asked that the case be certified as a class action on behalf of any
vegetarian who ate McDonald's fries after 1990 in the belief that they
contained no meat.

The lawsuit says McDonald's "intentionally failed to publicly disclose its
continued use of beef tallow in the (french fry) cooking process under the
guise of 'natural flavor."'

McDonald's released a statement Tuesday saying it has never claimed the
fries it sells in the United States are vegetarian. The statement also said
the recipe for the fries uses a "a miniscule trace of beef flavoring, not
tallow."

Tallow is essentially shortening made from beef fat. What McDonald's
does is add a small amount of beef extract to the water while the potatoes
are being cooked, the statement said.

In India and in predominantly Islamic countries where people do not eat
meat for religious reasons, McDonald's uses no beef or pork flavorings in
vegetarian menu items, the statement said.

Company spokeswoman Kim Bayer said McDonald's had not yet seen the
lawsuit and could not comment on it further. Bayer said she knew of no
similar claims being filed against the company.

The case arose from the concerns of Hindus, who refrain from eating beef,
Bharti said.

McDonald's announced in 1990 that the fast-food chain would no longer
use beef fat in making french fries and that only pure vegetable oil would
be used.

According to an e-mail printed in the American newspaper India-West on
April 6 and cited by Bharti, that scenario was confirmed by Megan Magee,
an employee in McDonald's customer satisfaction department.

The lawsuit says that Magee replied to an inquiry by Hitesh Shah, a
vegetarian, on March 28, saying, "For flavor enhancement, McDonald's
french fry suppliers use a minuscule amount of beef flavoring as an
ingredient in the raw product."

The e-mail went on to say that the beef is among the "natural flavors"
listed as ingredients.

"We're sorry if this has caused any confusion," Magee wrote.

"This is pretty outrageous behavior," Bharti said. "Hindus and vegetarians
all over the world feel shocked and betrayed by McDonald's deception and
ultimate greed."